Abstract

Shared caches are generally optimized to maximize the overall throughput, fairness, or both, among multiple competing programs. In shared environments and compute clouds, users are often unrelated to each other. In such circumstances, an overall gain in throughput does not justify an individual loss. This paper explores cache management policies that allow conservative sharing to protect the cache occupancy for individual programs, yet enable full cache utilization whenever there is an opportunity to do so. We propose a hardware-based mechanism called cache rationing. Each program is assigned a portion of the shared cache as its ration. The hardware support protects the ration so it cannot be taken away by peer programs while in use. However, a program can exceed its pre-allocated ration, but only if another program has unused space in its allocated portion of ration. We show that rationing provides good resource protection and full cache utilization of the shared cache for a variety of co-runs.

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